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Boat House
Klamath hull corrosion
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<blockquote data-quote="Weldorthemagnificent" data-source="post: 478523" data-attributes="member: 22139"><p>Being a budget minded fella myself, I would clean that hull inside and out within an inch of its life. Then use a nyalox wheel on a drill to clean the suspect areas. If there are only a few, I'd patch it with JB Weld. I've had good luck with the steelstik, it's the kind you knead together with your fingers and mash into place. Once it's hardened, you can sand it so it's not so obtrusive. First you have to clean down to good bare aluminum or it will come off as corrosion takes place underneath. </p><p>A corroded boat is probably not a forever boat, but hopefully you can get a good number of years of service from it.</p><p></p><p>Sent from my CLT-L04 using Tapatalk</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Weldorthemagnificent, post: 478523, member: 22139"] Being a budget minded fella myself, I would clean that hull inside and out within an inch of its life. Then use a nyalox wheel on a drill to clean the suspect areas. If there are only a few, I'd patch it with JB Weld. I've had good luck with the steelstik, it's the kind you knead together with your fingers and mash into place. Once it's hardened, you can sand it so it's not so obtrusive. First you have to clean down to good bare aluminum or it will come off as corrosion takes place underneath. A corroded boat is probably not a forever boat, but hopefully you can get a good number of years of service from it. Sent from my CLT-L04 using Tapatalk [/QUOTE]
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Klamath hull corrosion
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